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Chicago examiner vol xiii no 268 a _. saturday Chicago october 30 1915 saturday registered j s patent office â€ž_..,._ in clitojao and ei.sbwiikue price one ce>.t suburbs iwoc son whips rich man and other woman yoirth follows contractor from house and fractures skull with watch when he steps from car with mother's rival slapped my face and knocked me down says woman we met accidentally son is held on bail for assault Â» â– â– ' â€” william h boone a wealthy contractor and a heavy in vestor in the subdivision in park manor is at the englewood hospital with fracture of the skull his son ira is under arrest accused of having inflicted the wound when he is brought to trial november 9 on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon mrs oscar esman wife of the proprietor of the oakwoods hotel at seventy-first street and south Chicago avenue will be the principal witness it was because he found his father in the company of mrs esman it is said that ira boone first knocked the woman down and then stunned his father with a brick early wednes day morning the elder boone resides at 7109 st lawrence avenue he is mar ried but does not live with his wife mrs boone occupies an apartment next door to her husband young boone who is married and lives at 6531 cottage grove avenue sympa thizes with his mother sees father leave home and follows prom an alleyway the son saw his father leave his home tuesday night and followed liim the elder boone led the way to the south side but beyond forty-second street his son lost track of him several hours later ira boone was standing^t seventy-fourth street and ashland avenue waiting for a car as the car came to a halt his father two women and another man stepped off mrs esman was with boone mrs h g nicholson 7029 princeton avenue was the second woman her companion was not identified he struck me in the face says woman following is mrs esman's version of what happened as she told it to an examiner reporter last night ira boone stepped over to me and said what are you doing here with my father before i could re ply he struck me in the face i fell to the pavement mr william boone stooped over to pick me up but ira said let her lie there and with a curse struck his father on the head with something that looked like a brick mr boone fell almost on me passengers on the car summoned a policeman and ira boone was placed under arrest his father was hurried to the hospital where after an operation physicians said his wound would not prove fatal the younger boone later was released on 1,600 bail furnished by his mother meeting accidental asserts mrs esman my meeting with mr william boone was positively accidental de clared mrs esman he boarded the same car we were on i asked him to give me a letter of introduction for a friend of mine who wanted em ployment and he consented to go with us to write it it is all a ter jcisle mistake *Â» boone informed the police he had struck his father with a watch but that first his father had hit him with a whisky flask he admitted the police say that he objected to his father paying attentions to mrs morgan will recover from his operation son declares financier's condition favorable surgeons announce mother on way to be with him iby international news service new york oct 29 â€” an opera tion for acute appendicitis was suc cessfully performed at noon to-day mr morgan's recovery from the an aesthetic was prompt and his condi tion is fully as normal as is to be expected j w markoe m d h h m lyle m d the foregoing bulletin on the con dition of j pierpont morgan oper ated on for appendicitis to-day was issued from his office in new york to-night it was said no further bul letins would be issued before to-mor row word came from the sick room at 11 p m that the patient was rest ing quietly mrs john pierpont morgan mother of the patient was announced to night to be en route from her estate at highland falls to the bedside of her son the fact that rumors were in cir culation as to his father's serious condition was called to the attention of junius spencer morgan his son to-night he said i cannot comment on the rumors the matter is entirely in the hands of the physicians we expect that father will recover quickly morgan denied emphatically rumors that septic poisoning had developed wife blacked eye of countiss butler says a discoleration showed under one eye of william p countiss brother of frederick d countiss stock and bond broker in hyde park police court yesterday charles herrman coun tiss butler testified mrs countiss blackened her husband's eye in a fight he said countiss ordered him to buy some beer and whisky satur day night and told him to borrow 10 from a physician because countiss said he had no money at the time he said the fight occurred after he re turned with the whisky herrman arrested on a charge of insulting mrs countiss was charged also with tak ing a revolver and 3 when he was discharged he was fined j25 for disorderly conduct p d armour iii is judging porkers philip d armour 111 young p d as he is known around tha stock yards yesterday took up the task of learning the packing business from the ground up he appeared at the yards among the early workers and took his station in the hog pens learning to judge porkers will be his final lesson before he goes into the general offices where eventually his uncle j ogden armour intends to train him for head of the great packing firm lawson short on steel gets licking bv international news service new york oct 30 â€” the new york press this morning says that thomas w lawson was caught short on steel and took his licking yesterday in one of the big gest losses recorded for any of the bear leaders was the gossip in the financial district this report fol lowed the appearance on the tape of a record of a purchase in a single lot of 10,000 shares of steel considme theater magnate bankrupt by international news service seattle oct 29 john w con sidine theatrical magnate is bank rupt he admitted it here to-day and said he is in debt fully 100,000 he was being examined on a judgment for 2,500 obtained against him on an unpaid note he said he had parted with everything that would bring money corboys visit fair on their honeymoon by international news service san francisco oct 29 â€” mr and mrs william j corboy whose wed ding at springfield 111 on october 20 was a social event of national inter est arrived here to-day and regis tered at the Illinois building on the exposition grounds mrs corboy is the daughter of governor dunne wife names another and philosophy mrs kitty curry suing for main tenance shows precious honey love latter husband got declares realty man was lov ing until he met mrs chron and read hubbard's works before the other woman came into his life and he imbibed some in dividualistic philosophy from elbert hubbard charles n curry real es tate man was a loving husband his wife kitty testified yesterday af ternoon before judge hopkins after that she says he put roomers into their flat one of them being miss mayme waters the stenographer who was named in mrs harry thompson's recent suit against her husband mrs curry lives at 4036 michigan avenue now she declares curry is infat uated with mrs jessie chron of 5438 ellis avenue mrs curry asks sep arate maintenance tells uis methods here are some of the ways he showed his affection prior to the time that he became philosophic she said called her baby and darling rocked from her 7 until 11 o'clock one evening when she felt 111 sent her flower she loves him she says and is keeping and loving and cherishing the cheap little bathrobe he sent her and it cost him only j3.50 she said between sobs but i love it just the same and he promised with his hand on dear dead brother's ara that he wouldn't have anything more to do with mrs chron she wailed part of letter shown here is part of a letter said to have been written to mrs chron by curry introduced into the testimony yesterday by george remus mrs curry's attorney october 11 1911 3:30 p m precious honey love this is one of the longest days of my life and surely the most lone ly one for i have anguished for you since i got up this morning my precious honey love the rest of the letter was torn off here are some of the lines curry marked in and practiced from hub bard's pamphlet on marriage and divorce she said as a lover of freedom i believe men and women should mate and separate at will without interference by either church or state for in no other way can they live natural lives and develop the best that is in them it is my belief that marriage as an institution for regulating love and the mating of the sexes has been pro ductive of more human misery than any other law governing society assails puritan ideals the sexes cannot be kepfapart by any law of god or man church or state and as long as the human race exists men and women will mate marriage or no marriage nothing is more pitiful than a henpecked husband who is a stand ing apology for being on earth for a man or woman at the thne of the marriage oeremony to promise to love their consort until death do them part is one of the greatest ab surdities that prevails i never read of a divorce in the papers without rejoicing for i know that relief and freedom have come to those who needed and wanted it matrimonial hells must be abol ished by easy divorces clergymen will unite people in marriage when they know they are totally unfit for each other just to get the fee pair want to marry until love ends emil a sporron and anna m sae ther of Chicago were disappointed when judge claire edwards of wau kegan refused to insert a provisional clause in the ceremony when he united them in marriage yesterday they wanted the clause until we cease to love inserted the judge declined to sanction any ceremony i that might open a way for violation joan sawyer has tooth pulled and falls in faint on stage dancer suffers agonies during her act but conceals pain until nature revolts miss joan sawyer the dancer was suffering agonies last night while she danced with her partner george harcourt on the stage of the ma jestic theater but she concealed her suffering behind the mask of a set smile until the instant when she fell in a dead faint before the foot lights then nobody understood immediate ly that anything serious had hap pened the people on the stage thought the fall was new business women in the audience were first to understand and they called why doesn't some one pick her up miss sawyer was taken to her apartment at the hotel sherman physicians said it was a nervous breakdown the dancer has been at high tension for four years recent ly she carried a suffrage banner from new york to san francisco by auto that increased her nervousness and yesterday it was increased again when she had a tooth extracted kaiser challenged to ask whitlock recall by international news service london oct 29 â€” a dispatch from amsterdam to the exchange tele graph states that the newspaper vos sische zeitung challenges germany to ask for the recall of brand whitlock as united states minister to belgium the cavell incident the paper says must be used as the reason the paper states that whitlock is the united states minister accredited to havre and that if the united states wants a representative in brussels it must send one agreeable to ger many canada will raise 100,000 more troops bv international news service ottawa oct 29 â€” in response to the appeal of king george the cana dian government to-day authorized the raising of 100,000 more troops making canada's army 250,000 men the previous authorization was 150 000 men but so enthusiastic has been recruiting that 173,000 men have al ready been enlisted henry d eastabrook seeks u.s presidency 1 jby international news service omaha neb oct 29 henry d i estabrook new york attorney for j merly of omaha launched his candi | dacy for the republican nomination i for the presidency here to-night in 1 : speech before the mckinley club es i tabrook will campaign for delegates from nebraska and the other west ern states swoboda is expelled from france as spy bv international news service paris oct 28.â€”raymond woboda who claimed american citizenship when arrested last spring on a charge of having caused the fire on la tour aine of the french line was cleared i of this charge and later placed on trial on a charge of espionage was expelled from france to-day he has gone to switzerland the weather at the fair san francisco oct 29.â€”the weather in san francisco to-day was warm and clear with a maximum temperature of 75 and a minimum of 55 u s weather foeecast Chicago amd vicinity â€” fair j saturday and sunday with continued i mild temperature sentle to moderate variable windn â€¢ temperati'kb for twenty-four hours ending at 7 p m hifche*t bo lonent 4-1 mean .",Â«. normal temperature for the day 47 kxco of temperature since january 1 390 degrees precipitation for twenty-four hours ending at 7 ip m none excess since january 1 1.46 inches relative humidity 7 a m 71 2 p m 44 7 p m 10 itarnmetrie pressure reduced to sea lerel 7 a m 30.03 7 p m 30.88 sunrise to-day jilo himset 4:47 george v rallies as chiefs of war meet british ruler severely injured in fall from horse while reviewing troops at front under medical care at palace general joffre pays unexpected visit tc london confers with asquith kitchener and other leaders wales to capital by international news service london oct 29 george v eng land's king to-night is under sur geons care at buckingham palace the first european monarch severely injured in the world war the latest bulletin issued by the court physi cians declared no complications have arisen and that the king's condition is showing improvement the state ment says the king had a fair night he en joyed home ffleep hln temperature â– im 09.2 and his pulse 7s his general condition ia improved and no compli cations have arisen dits anthony bowlby iieu trand dawson the king was injured in a fall from his horse while reviewing brit ish troops at the front thursday : prince of wat.es to palace the prince of wates heir appar ent to the english throne arrived to day and is at buckingham palace with his father coincidentally with the arrival of the injured monarch london received j an unexpected visit to-day from gen eral joffre french commander in chief it was the first time he had j visited england since the outbreak of the war war chiefs in session with lord kitchener and sir ed ward grey the french commander had luncheon with the french am bassador at the embassy and in the afternoon there was a conference at 10 downing street those present in cluding premier asquith lord kitch ener general joffre arthur j bal four first lord of the admiralty and david lloyd-george minister of mu nitions after this conference gen eral joffre had a further conference with lloyd-george to-night lord kitchener gave a dinner for general joffre the following official announce ment of the accident was issued by the press bureau while the king nu inspecting his army in the field yesterday his horse excited by the cheers of the troops reared np and fell the king was se verely bruised and will be confined to his bed for the present until a late hour to-day this was the only news of the king's fall but to-night details were received king pinned under horse the british troops were drawn up alonir a road at the rear of the bat tle line awaiting review by their monarch the king's mare became affrighted at the loud cheering and reared twice to her hind legs the first time the mare came down on her front forefeet but the sec ond time she fell carrying the king with her and jarring him from the saddle he was caught under the animal which rolled over on his leg officers and members of his staff rushed to nls assistance and he was assisted to his motor car undoubted ly in great pain it was a dramatic moment when the news of the accident was broken to the troops the men of the first corps which already had been in spected could hear the cheers of their j fellow soldiers nearly a mile away } which told them the second review was over men learn of accident soon a motor car was seen dashing down the road as it drew up the cheering began and from along the entire line came a burst of wild huzzas in the excitement none no ticed that the car aid not fly the royal standard finally just as the men were be ing quieted by their commanders the royal auto sped past the king was sitting half-bent in a corner ot the machine.^tlis face wore a faint smile in acknowledgment of the men's : ' hall cainc tells of britain's tribute to nurse shot as spy by hall caine miss cavell taught us how to die says famous novelist 10,000 at tend the memorial at st paul's england's famous novelist author of the manxman the christian ' the woman thou oavest me etc , c'opyiierht 11)1 lnu'mutional neivs service . london oct 29 oh death where is thy sting oh grave where is thy victory down to a fortnight ago few of us outside the immediate cir cle of nurse cavell's family and friends even so much as heard her name ; now all the world knows it it has gone as i by a supernatural trumpet blast to the uttermost ends of the earth mingled with a cry of horror and execration at the brutal * act of tyranny it has rung round the globe . and to-day ten thousand persons have assembled in the cathedral church of the capital of our empire to thank god for the great soul it stood for in this transitory existence to per petuate her memory and to quicken the holy spirit of self-sac rifice which was exemplified in her life and death scene will never be forgotten what a scene it has been none of us will ever forgt it in the gray dawn of one of the first days of winter london was already moving toward st faul's cathedral the morn ing was fine but the city was heavy and sad long before the service began traffic in the street around the cathedral was first impeded then arrested and finally stopped at length a cordon of police had to keep back the surging swaying crowds that were struggling to reach the doors inside the cathedral what a sight it was ! the vast multitude stretched from " the chancel steps and the broad space under the dome to where the colossal statues of england's mighty dead emerged from the gloom by the far-off portico the gray ofd sanctuary has witnessed many a great mov ing spectacle services of intercession of supplication of lam entation of thanksgiving of rejoicing and of mourning but perhaps never before has it seen anything quite like this i queen present with many notables what an assembly the king was represented by the queen's secretary and queen alexandra the beloved of the people in her own person the prime minister and many mem bers of his cabinet statesmen scholars scientists a great com pany of nurses in their various uniforms fresh from the great houses of pain pathetic groups here and there of wounded sol diers home from the battlefield and then an immense concourse of the general public chiefly women many of them in black the wives the sisters and the mothers of the brave lads who are fighting for us at the front or of those other brave boys who already have fought and fallen were there what has brought this multitude together a great victory the close of a great campaign the funeral as at this time last year of a grand old warrior who after many glorious victories has died as is most fit within the sound of the guns in the war he foretold and is being borne to his last resting place amid the acclamations of his countrymen and the homage of the world death declared a barbarous act no but in memory of a poor woman a poor hospital nurse who has been foully done to death by a barbarous enemy con demned for acts of mercy and humanity tried in secret for so in effect it was shot in haste and then buried in a traitor's grave what a triumph for religion for christianity for the church what an answer to nietzsche what a rebuke to treitschke ! what a smashing blow to all the wise philosophers who have been telling us that corsica has conquered galilee that in these dark and evil days the people of london should assemble in tens of thousands to thank god for the shadow of a scaffold and to find inspiration in thinking of the martyr's end is proof enough that not lust of empire not the will to gain power not war for its own sake or for the triumphs it brings in its train but religion and with it righteousness is still the bread of our souls poor nurse cavell is no longer poor poor nurse cavell !" we were saying to each other as we went into the cathedral thinking of that mockery of a military trial at brussels and of the shower of bullets in the prison yard from the muskets of an inhuman soldiery but as we came out of it moved to tears and thrilled to our throbbing throats scarcely able to speak for the emotion that mastered us we were saying to ourselves no not poor â€” great heroic im mortal evelasting â€” victorious one of the sentinels on the hilltops of eternity who have won the right to stand by the beacon fires of hope and sacrifice which light up the destinies of mankind after a hush â€” the silence of waiting time â€” and as the ca thedral clock outside with its solemn boom is striking the hour of noon the service begins it is choral throughout except for french drive 20 miles into bulgaria allies capture strumitza teutons hurl serbs back over frontie from bosnia bulgars bat tle to outposts of nish i inhabitants of temporary capita reported fleeing athens nov declares roumania will ait entente opening road to russia by international news service london oct 29 french troops co-operating with the serbian southern army have capturec strumitza on the bulgarian border fifteen miles from greece and ad 1 vanced twenty miles into bulgarian i territory this report contained in a new : dispatth from athens to-night marks i the first great offensive of the allied ! forces in the balkans the victory is believed to be the accomplishment icf the 150,000 fresh french troops ! reported yesterday as having landed j in saloniki bulgars recapture j veles from serbs [â– while this serious reverse for ths ', bulgars is reported in one dispatch i a message to the times from athens [ announces that the bulgarians have j recaptured veles farther to th i north frcm which they were drivers i several days ago by a combined ! french and serbian attack the steady battering tactics of the 1 austro-germans in northwest serbia i to-day drove the serbians out of b -! nia which they had invaded south pf ; vtsegrad and practically cleared all i northwest serbia of its defenders j the teutons advanced west of the j morava capturing 1,300 men and reaching the rudnik-sgarkovick-cu mie-batochina front storming posi tions on both sides of resava and battle raging at gates of nish at the same time the bu'gars ad ! vanced to within sixteen miles of nish for the capture of which a bat tle is raging while the civilian real i dents are reported in flight while the steam roller advance o the teutonic invaders continued in the north the entente allies received some encouragement in a dispatel from athens declaring there are in dications roumania will accept the proposals of the entente allies anc join them against the teutons arid bulgars this dispatch contradicted an announcement from rome las night that roumania has decided to cast her lot with the central powers it is now believed the russian troops concentrated on the serbian border will be allowed passage to the relief of the serbs russia is said to have made extensive conces sions to roumania including the ees sion of bessarabia greece denies plan ; to oppose allies the gloom which pervaded londo i yesterday with the news that greec i had demanded the immediate with j drawal of the entente troops froir saloniki lightened perceptibly to-day when the greek legation officially denied intention to assume a hostile attitude toward the allies despite this it was admitted tha the situation of serbia has grown so serious that much credence is given a dispatch from amsterdam stating that king peter had made arrange ments to flee to italy west of strumitza and along tha saloniki-nish railway south of veles the bloodiest fighting of the cam paign has developed bulgarian turkish serbian french and british troops are engaged underestimating the strength ot the allied force6 the bulgarian were â€¢ forced out of their strong positions continued on 7th page 2d column bfsr awake from the dead the young man who actually ||| underwent the experience in a new orleans morgue tell how it feels to awake from the dead j'jul in sunday's examiner i final i j edition j | â€¢ , - \

Chicago examiner vol xiii no 268 a _. saturday Chicago october 30 1915 saturday registered j s patent office â€ž_..,._ in clitojao and ei.sbwiikue price one ce>.t suburbs iwoc son whips rich man and other woman yoirth follows contractor from house and fractures skull with watch when he steps from car with mother's rival slapped my face and knocked me down says woman we met accidentally son is held on bail for assault Â» â– â– ' â€” william h boone a wealthy contractor and a heavy in vestor in the subdivision in park manor is at the englewood hospital with fracture of the skull his son ira is under arrest accused of having inflicted the wound when he is brought to trial november 9 on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon mrs oscar esman wife of the proprietor of the oakwoods hotel at seventy-first street and south Chicago avenue will be the principal witness it was because he found his father in the company of mrs esman it is said that ira boone first knocked the woman down and then stunned his father with a brick early wednes day morning the elder boone resides at 7109 st lawrence avenue he is mar ried but does not live with his wife mrs boone occupies an apartment next door to her husband young boone who is married and lives at 6531 cottage grove avenue sympa thizes with his mother sees father leave home and follows prom an alleyway the son saw his father leave his home tuesday night and followed liim the elder boone led the way to the south side but beyond forty-second street his son lost track of him several hours later ira boone was standing^t seventy-fourth street and ashland avenue waiting for a car as the car came to a halt his father two women and another man stepped off mrs esman was with boone mrs h g nicholson 7029 princeton avenue was the second woman her companion was not identified he struck me in the face says woman following is mrs esman's version of what happened as she told it to an examiner reporter last night ira boone stepped over to me and said what are you doing here with my father before i could re ply he struck me in the face i fell to the pavement mr william boone stooped over to pick me up but ira said let her lie there and with a curse struck his father on the head with something that looked like a brick mr boone fell almost on me passengers on the car summoned a policeman and ira boone was placed under arrest his father was hurried to the hospital where after an operation physicians said his wound would not prove fatal the younger boone later was released on 1,600 bail furnished by his mother meeting accidental asserts mrs esman my meeting with mr william boone was positively accidental de clared mrs esman he boarded the same car we were on i asked him to give me a letter of introduction for a friend of mine who wanted em ployment and he consented to go with us to write it it is all a ter jcisle mistake *Â» boone informed the police he had struck his father with a watch but that first his father had hit him with a whisky flask he admitted the police say that he objected to his father paying attentions to mrs morgan will recover from his operation son declares financier's condition favorable surgeons announce mother on way to be with him iby international news service new york oct 29 â€” an opera tion for acute appendicitis was suc cessfully performed at noon to-day mr morgan's recovery from the an aesthetic was prompt and his condi tion is fully as normal as is to be expected j w markoe m d h h m lyle m d the foregoing bulletin on the con dition of j pierpont morgan oper ated on for appendicitis to-day was issued from his office in new york to-night it was said no further bul letins would be issued before to-mor row word came from the sick room at 11 p m that the patient was rest ing quietly mrs john pierpont morgan mother of the patient was announced to night to be en route from her estate at highland falls to the bedside of her son the fact that rumors were in cir culation as to his father's serious condition was called to the attention of junius spencer morgan his son to-night he said i cannot comment on the rumors the matter is entirely in the hands of the physicians we expect that father will recover quickly morgan denied emphatically rumors that septic poisoning had developed wife blacked eye of countiss butler says a discoleration showed under one eye of william p countiss brother of frederick d countiss stock and bond broker in hyde park police court yesterday charles herrman coun tiss butler testified mrs countiss blackened her husband's eye in a fight he said countiss ordered him to buy some beer and whisky satur day night and told him to borrow 10 from a physician because countiss said he had no money at the time he said the fight occurred after he re turned with the whisky herrman arrested on a charge of insulting mrs countiss was charged also with tak ing a revolver and 3 when he was discharged he was fined j25 for disorderly conduct p d armour iii is judging porkers philip d armour 111 young p d as he is known around tha stock yards yesterday took up the task of learning the packing business from the ground up he appeared at the yards among the early workers and took his station in the hog pens learning to judge porkers will be his final lesson before he goes into the general offices where eventually his uncle j ogden armour intends to train him for head of the great packing firm lawson short on steel gets licking bv international news service new york oct 30 â€” the new york press this morning says that thomas w lawson was caught short on steel and took his licking yesterday in one of the big gest losses recorded for any of the bear leaders was the gossip in the financial district this report fol lowed the appearance on the tape of a record of a purchase in a single lot of 10,000 shares of steel considme theater magnate bankrupt by international news service seattle oct 29 john w con sidine theatrical magnate is bank rupt he admitted it here to-day and said he is in debt fully 100,000 he was being examined on a judgment for 2,500 obtained against him on an unpaid note he said he had parted with everything that would bring money corboys visit fair on their honeymoon by international news service san francisco oct 29 â€” mr and mrs william j corboy whose wed ding at springfield 111 on october 20 was a social event of national inter est arrived here to-day and regis tered at the Illinois building on the exposition grounds mrs corboy is the daughter of governor dunne wife names another and philosophy mrs kitty curry suing for main tenance shows precious honey love latter husband got declares realty man was lov ing until he met mrs chron and read hubbard's works before the other woman came into his life and he imbibed some in dividualistic philosophy from elbert hubbard charles n curry real es tate man was a loving husband his wife kitty testified yesterday af ternoon before judge hopkins after that she says he put roomers into their flat one of them being miss mayme waters the stenographer who was named in mrs harry thompson's recent suit against her husband mrs curry lives at 4036 michigan avenue now she declares curry is infat uated with mrs jessie chron of 5438 ellis avenue mrs curry asks sep arate maintenance tells uis methods here are some of the ways he showed his affection prior to the time that he became philosophic she said called her baby and darling rocked from her 7 until 11 o'clock one evening when she felt 111 sent her flower she loves him she says and is keeping and loving and cherishing the cheap little bathrobe he sent her and it cost him only j3.50 she said between sobs but i love it just the same and he promised with his hand on dear dead brother's ara that he wouldn't have anything more to do with mrs chron she wailed part of letter shown here is part of a letter said to have been written to mrs chron by curry introduced into the testimony yesterday by george remus mrs curry's attorney october 11 1911 3:30 p m precious honey love this is one of the longest days of my life and surely the most lone ly one for i have anguished for you since i got up this morning my precious honey love the rest of the letter was torn off here are some of the lines curry marked in and practiced from hub bard's pamphlet on marriage and divorce she said as a lover of freedom i believe men and women should mate and separate at will without interference by either church or state for in no other way can they live natural lives and develop the best that is in them it is my belief that marriage as an institution for regulating love and the mating of the sexes has been pro ductive of more human misery than any other law governing society assails puritan ideals the sexes cannot be kepfapart by any law of god or man church or state and as long as the human race exists men and women will mate marriage or no marriage nothing is more pitiful than a henpecked husband who is a stand ing apology for being on earth for a man or woman at the thne of the marriage oeremony to promise to love their consort until death do them part is one of the greatest ab surdities that prevails i never read of a divorce in the papers without rejoicing for i know that relief and freedom have come to those who needed and wanted it matrimonial hells must be abol ished by easy divorces clergymen will unite people in marriage when they know they are totally unfit for each other just to get the fee pair want to marry until love ends emil a sporron and anna m sae ther of Chicago were disappointed when judge claire edwards of wau kegan refused to insert a provisional clause in the ceremony when he united them in marriage yesterday they wanted the clause until we cease to love inserted the judge declined to sanction any ceremony i that might open a way for violation joan sawyer has tooth pulled and falls in faint on stage dancer suffers agonies during her act but conceals pain until nature revolts miss joan sawyer the dancer was suffering agonies last night while she danced with her partner george harcourt on the stage of the ma jestic theater but she concealed her suffering behind the mask of a set smile until the instant when she fell in a dead faint before the foot lights then nobody understood immediate ly that anything serious had hap pened the people on the stage thought the fall was new business women in the audience were first to understand and they called why doesn't some one pick her up miss sawyer was taken to her apartment at the hotel sherman physicians said it was a nervous breakdown the dancer has been at high tension for four years recent ly she carried a suffrage banner from new york to san francisco by auto that increased her nervousness and yesterday it was increased again when she had a tooth extracted kaiser challenged to ask whitlock recall by international news service london oct 29 â€” a dispatch from amsterdam to the exchange tele graph states that the newspaper vos sische zeitung challenges germany to ask for the recall of brand whitlock as united states minister to belgium the cavell incident the paper says must be used as the reason the paper states that whitlock is the united states minister accredited to havre and that if the united states wants a representative in brussels it must send one agreeable to ger many canada will raise 100,000 more troops bv international news service ottawa oct 29 â€” in response to the appeal of king george the cana dian government to-day authorized the raising of 100,000 more troops making canada's army 250,000 men the previous authorization was 150 000 men but so enthusiastic has been recruiting that 173,000 men have al ready been enlisted henry d eastabrook seeks u.s presidency 1 jby international news service omaha neb oct 29 henry d i estabrook new york attorney for j merly of omaha launched his candi | dacy for the republican nomination i for the presidency here to-night in 1 : speech before the mckinley club es i tabrook will campaign for delegates from nebraska and the other west ern states swoboda is expelled from france as spy bv international news service paris oct 28.â€”raymond woboda who claimed american citizenship when arrested last spring on a charge of having caused the fire on la tour aine of the french line was cleared i of this charge and later placed on trial on a charge of espionage was expelled from france to-day he has gone to switzerland the weather at the fair san francisco oct 29.â€”the weather in san francisco to-day was warm and clear with a maximum temperature of 75 and a minimum of 55 u s weather foeecast Chicago amd vicinity â€” fair j saturday and sunday with continued i mild temperature sentle to moderate variable windn â€¢ temperati'kb for twenty-four hours ending at 7 p m hifche*t bo lonent 4-1 mean .",Â«. normal temperature for the day 47 kxco of temperature since january 1 390 degrees precipitation for twenty-four hours ending at 7 ip m none excess since january 1 1.46 inches relative humidity 7 a m 71 2 p m 44 7 p m 10 itarnmetrie pressure reduced to sea lerel 7 a m 30.03 7 p m 30.88 sunrise to-day jilo himset 4:47 george v rallies as chiefs of war meet british ruler severely injured in fall from horse while reviewing troops at front under medical care at palace general joffre pays unexpected visit tc london confers with asquith kitchener and other leaders wales to capital by international news service london oct 29 george v eng land's king to-night is under sur geons care at buckingham palace the first european monarch severely injured in the world war the latest bulletin issued by the court physi cians declared no complications have arisen and that the king's condition is showing improvement the state ment says the king had a fair night he en joyed home ffleep hln temperature â– im 09.2 and his pulse 7s his general condition ia improved and no compli cations have arisen dits anthony bowlby iieu trand dawson the king was injured in a fall from his horse while reviewing brit ish troops at the front thursday : prince of wat.es to palace the prince of wates heir appar ent to the english throne arrived to day and is at buckingham palace with his father coincidentally with the arrival of the injured monarch london received j an unexpected visit to-day from gen eral joffre french commander in chief it was the first time he had j visited england since the outbreak of the war war chiefs in session with lord kitchener and sir ed ward grey the french commander had luncheon with the french am bassador at the embassy and in the afternoon there was a conference at 10 downing street those present in cluding premier asquith lord kitch ener general joffre arthur j bal four first lord of the admiralty and david lloyd-george minister of mu nitions after this conference gen eral joffre had a further conference with lloyd-george to-night lord kitchener gave a dinner for general joffre the following official announce ment of the accident was issued by the press bureau while the king nu inspecting his army in the field yesterday his horse excited by the cheers of the troops reared np and fell the king was se verely bruised and will be confined to his bed for the present until a late hour to-day this was the only news of the king's fall but to-night details were received king pinned under horse the british troops were drawn up alonir a road at the rear of the bat tle line awaiting review by their monarch the king's mare became affrighted at the loud cheering and reared twice to her hind legs the first time the mare came down on her front forefeet but the sec ond time she fell carrying the king with her and jarring him from the saddle he was caught under the animal which rolled over on his leg officers and members of his staff rushed to nls assistance and he was assisted to his motor car undoubted ly in great pain it was a dramatic moment when the news of the accident was broken to the troops the men of the first corps which already had been in spected could hear the cheers of their j fellow soldiers nearly a mile away } which told them the second review was over men learn of accident soon a motor car was seen dashing down the road as it drew up the cheering began and from along the entire line came a burst of wild huzzas in the excitement none no ticed that the car aid not fly the royal standard finally just as the men were be ing quieted by their commanders the royal auto sped past the king was sitting half-bent in a corner ot the machine.^tlis face wore a faint smile in acknowledgment of the men's : ' hall cainc tells of britain's tribute to nurse shot as spy by hall caine miss cavell taught us how to die says famous novelist 10,000 at tend the memorial at st paul's england's famous novelist author of the manxman the christian ' the woman thou oavest me etc , c'opyiierht 11)1 lnu'mutional neivs service . london oct 29 oh death where is thy sting oh grave where is thy victory down to a fortnight ago few of us outside the immediate cir cle of nurse cavell's family and friends even so much as heard her name ; now all the world knows it it has gone as i by a supernatural trumpet blast to the uttermost ends of the earth mingled with a cry of horror and execration at the brutal * act of tyranny it has rung round the globe . and to-day ten thousand persons have assembled in the cathedral church of the capital of our empire to thank god for the great soul it stood for in this transitory existence to per petuate her memory and to quicken the holy spirit of self-sac rifice which was exemplified in her life and death scene will never be forgotten what a scene it has been none of us will ever forgt it in the gray dawn of one of the first days of winter london was already moving toward st faul's cathedral the morn ing was fine but the city was heavy and sad long before the service began traffic in the street around the cathedral was first impeded then arrested and finally stopped at length a cordon of police had to keep back the surging swaying crowds that were struggling to reach the doors inside the cathedral what a sight it was ! the vast multitude stretched from " the chancel steps and the broad space under the dome to where the colossal statues of england's mighty dead emerged from the gloom by the far-off portico the gray ofd sanctuary has witnessed many a great mov ing spectacle services of intercession of supplication of lam entation of thanksgiving of rejoicing and of mourning but perhaps never before has it seen anything quite like this i queen present with many notables what an assembly the king was represented by the queen's secretary and queen alexandra the beloved of the people in her own person the prime minister and many mem bers of his cabinet statesmen scholars scientists a great com pany of nurses in their various uniforms fresh from the great houses of pain pathetic groups here and there of wounded sol diers home from the battlefield and then an immense concourse of the general public chiefly women many of them in black the wives the sisters and the mothers of the brave lads who are fighting for us at the front or of those other brave boys who already have fought and fallen were there what has brought this multitude together a great victory the close of a great campaign the funeral as at this time last year of a grand old warrior who after many glorious victories has died as is most fit within the sound of the guns in the war he foretold and is being borne to his last resting place amid the acclamations of his countrymen and the homage of the world death declared a barbarous act no but in memory of a poor woman a poor hospital nurse who has been foully done to death by a barbarous enemy con demned for acts of mercy and humanity tried in secret for so in effect it was shot in haste and then buried in a traitor's grave what a triumph for religion for christianity for the church what an answer to nietzsche what a rebuke to treitschke ! what a smashing blow to all the wise philosophers who have been telling us that corsica has conquered galilee that in these dark and evil days the people of london should assemble in tens of thousands to thank god for the shadow of a scaffold and to find inspiration in thinking of the martyr's end is proof enough that not lust of empire not the will to gain power not war for its own sake or for the triumphs it brings in its train but religion and with it righteousness is still the bread of our souls poor nurse cavell is no longer poor poor nurse cavell !" we were saying to each other as we went into the cathedral thinking of that mockery of a military trial at brussels and of the shower of bullets in the prison yard from the muskets of an inhuman soldiery but as we came out of it moved to tears and thrilled to our throbbing throats scarcely able to speak for the emotion that mastered us we were saying to ourselves no not poor â€” great heroic im mortal evelasting â€” victorious one of the sentinels on the hilltops of eternity who have won the right to stand by the beacon fires of hope and sacrifice which light up the destinies of mankind after a hush â€” the silence of waiting time â€” and as the ca thedral clock outside with its solemn boom is striking the hour of noon the service begins it is choral throughout except for french drive 20 miles into bulgaria allies capture strumitza teutons hurl serbs back over frontie from bosnia bulgars bat tle to outposts of nish i inhabitants of temporary capita reported fleeing athens nov declares roumania will ait entente opening road to russia by international news service london oct 29 french troops co-operating with the serbian southern army have capturec strumitza on the bulgarian border fifteen miles from greece and ad 1 vanced twenty miles into bulgarian i territory this report contained in a new : dispatth from athens to-night marks i the first great offensive of the allied ! forces in the balkans the victory is believed to be the accomplishment icf the 150,000 fresh french troops ! reported yesterday as having landed j in saloniki bulgars recapture j veles from serbs [â– while this serious reverse for ths ', bulgars is reported in one dispatch i a message to the times from athens [ announces that the bulgarians have j recaptured veles farther to th i north frcm which they were drivers i several days ago by a combined ! french and serbian attack the steady battering tactics of the 1 austro-germans in northwest serbia i to-day drove the serbians out of b -! nia which they had invaded south pf ; vtsegrad and practically cleared all i northwest serbia of its defenders j the teutons advanced west of the j morava capturing 1,300 men and reaching the rudnik-sgarkovick-cu mie-batochina front storming posi tions on both sides of resava and battle raging at gates of nish at the same time the bu'gars ad ! vanced to within sixteen miles of nish for the capture of which a bat tle is raging while the civilian real i dents are reported in flight while the steam roller advance o the teutonic invaders continued in the north the entente allies received some encouragement in a dispatel from athens declaring there are in dications roumania will accept the proposals of the entente allies anc join them against the teutons arid bulgars this dispatch contradicted an announcement from rome las night that roumania has decided to cast her lot with the central powers it is now believed the russian troops concentrated on the serbian border will be allowed passage to the relief of the serbs russia is said to have made extensive conces sions to roumania including the ees sion of bessarabia greece denies plan ; to oppose allies the gloom which pervaded londo i yesterday with the news that greec i had demanded the immediate with j drawal of the entente troops froir saloniki lightened perceptibly to-day when the greek legation officially denied intention to assume a hostile attitude toward the allies despite this it was admitted tha the situation of serbia has grown so serious that much credence is given a dispatch from amsterdam stating that king peter had made arrange ments to flee to italy west of strumitza and along tha saloniki-nish railway south of veles the bloodiest fighting of the cam paign has developed bulgarian turkish serbian french and british troops are engaged underestimating the strength ot the allied force6 the bulgarian were â€¢ forced out of their strong positions continued on 7th page 2d column bfsr awake from the dead the young man who actually ||| underwent the experience in a new orleans morgue tell how it feels to awake from the dead j'jul in sunday's examiner i final i j edition j | â€¢ , - \